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‘Unclonable’ RFID chip uses atomic-level chip defects for identification, security

By | March 15, 2010, 6:58 AM PDT

The next-generation radio-frequency identification tag may be impossible to copy.

San Jose, Calif.-based Verayo says it has developed a new, counterfeit-poof RFID chip that uses the minute manufacturing flaws present on every chip as the basis for unique identification and security.

RFID tags, which are used in as diverse environments as the federal government, retail stores, corporate identification tags and your passport, have been the subject of great debate because they transmit information using radio waves, which can be intercepted.

In the case of a U.S. passport, the tags contain a digitized, encrypted version of the information that’s printed on the last page — meaning anyone who successfully eavesdrops on that transmission could walk away with your identity.

Cryptography helps prevent the copying, but it’s not foolproof, and it makes the chips more expensive.

Verayo’s chips, on the other hand, base their security on the fact that no two chips are exactly alike.

MIT Technology Review explains:

The components of a computer circuit are measured in billionths of a meter. So a stray atom here or there during manufacturing can cause a wire to turn out slightly thicker or thinner than the specs call for. That leads to miniscule variations in how fast the circuit works, and there’s nothing that can be done to prevent it.

So instead of trying to prevent it, Srini Devadas, an electrical engineering professor at MIT and the founder and chief technology officer at Verayo, decided to exploit it. A signal traveling through a simple circuit will go faster or slower depending on these physical variations. By sending a series of signals through, and measuring how fast they travel, he can generate a string of numbers unique to each circuit. This has been dubbed a “physical unclonable function”–PUF for short.

Run those numbers through a series of secret mathematical equations, and security officials end up with a series of challenge and response pairs unique to each chip, since each PUF is different.

Voilà: instant security.

The only downside? That list of challenge-response pairs must be itself kept secret on the back-end, or else the whole system is cracked.

Verayo says the system is merely intended to be one authentication step in a complete cryptographic system, so it’s no silver bullet.

But for disposable RFID tags that don’t need prohibitively expensive security solutions, this might do the trick.

Here’s a video of Vivek Khandelwal, Verayo’s vice president of marketing, demonstrating the system:

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Andrew Nusca

About Andrew Nusca

Andrew Nusca is editor of SmartPlanet.

Andrew Nusca

Andrew Nusca

Editor

Andrew Nusca is editor of SmartPlanet and an associate editor for ZDNet. Previously, he worked at Money, Men's Vogue and Popular Mechanics magazines. He holds degrees from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism and New York University. He based in New York but resides in Philadelphia.

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Andrew Nusca

Andrew Nusca
Andrew Nusca does not hold any investments in the companies he covers.
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RE: 'Unclonable' RFID chip uses atomic-level chip defects for identificatio
This is a very interesting article and this technology sounds like a
great improvement considering the current security concerns with
RFID tags. I know that some of the main concerns of the
consumer and the users of RFID Readers deal
with security issues and the ability for the RFID tags to be copied.
My only concern with this new technology is the cost of the RFID
tags.
Posted by kpknable
15th Mar 2010
0 Votes
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Pretty cool.
Makes for a nice layer of casual intrusion protection.
Like any 'shared key' though, every 'secret' based on this technology is subject to governmental, law enforcement and therefore political intrusion.
True random keys, encoded via this 'randomizer engine' and used JUST ONCE to form the key for a really large public / private cypher key, for a single exchange at the purchase time, for the customer will enter, would build a wall that even the political hacks would be hard pressed to break.
As it is,this sounds too much like a MMT attack prone system.
Posted by mykmlr@...
15th Mar 2010
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RE: 'Unclonable' RFID chip uses atomic-level chip defects for identification, security
I recall a similar media-based trick used to copy-protect (5 1/4") floppy disks:

They would have a "soft sector" on the disk which was not magnetized. If it was read repeatedly it would come back each time with a different response.

If the disk was copied, that sector would be hard-written with whatever the original read at the time of copying.

When the copy disk was run, that sector would read back with the same data each time indicating that it was a copy.
Posted by drkimca
16th Mar 2010
0 Votes
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RE: 'Unclonable' RFID chip uses atomic-level chip defects for identification, security
as long as keeping it in your back pocket / in the sunny windscreen / through a wash cycle doesn't change that signature - ever so slightly...
Posted by dilgreen@...
16th Mar 2010
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